The relationship between dental anxiety and reported dental treatment experience in children aged 11 to 14 years

Joint Authors

al-Far, Man Y.
Habahbeh, Nidal
al-Saddi, Raniya
Rasas, Ihab

Source

Journal of the Royal Medical Services

Issue

Vol. 19, Issue 2 (30 Jun. 2012), pp.44-50, 7 p.

Publisher

The Royal Medical Services Jordan Armed Forces

Publication Date

2012-06-30

Country of Publication

Jordan

No. of Pages

7

Main Subjects

Dental

Topics

Abstract EN

-Objective: The aim of the study was to determine the influence of reported dental experience on dental anxiety in children aged 11-14 years in Liverpool, United Kingdom.

Methods: A total 366 children completed a two-part questionnaire.

The first part invited the children to record which dental procedures they had experienced.

These procedures were the same as those included in the Modified Child Dental Anxiety Scale, which formed the second part of the questionnaire.

The scale consisted of eight questions, which invited the children to rate their anxiety about a variety of dental procedures, including going to the dentist in general, a dental examination, a scale and polish, local anaesthesia, dental restoration, dental extraction, dental treatment under general anaesthesia and dental treatment under inhalation sedation.

The Modified Child Dental Anxiety Scale allowed the children to report on a five point Likert scale about how relaxed or worried they were for each of these scenarios.

Crosstabulation and t-tests were used to determine the relationship between dental anxiety and reported dental experience.

The significance level for the study was set at p<0.05.

Results: Females were found to have significantly higher (p<0.05) mean anxiety score (21.87) than males (18.90).

Children were significantly less anxious about specific items of dental treatment if they had experienced that particular form of treatment.

In the study group of 366 children, 232 (63.4%) reported that they had experienced a dental filling had a mean anxiety score of 2.23, 105 (28.7%) children reported that they had not experienced a dental filling had a mean value for the dental filling item of 2.70.

Conclusions: Females were found to be statistically more dentally anxious than males.

Children who reported that they had experienced dental treatment and visited the dentist more frequently were significantly less anxious than those who reported infrequent visits.

American Psychological Association (APA)

al-Far, Man Y.& Habahbeh, Nidal& al-Saddi, Raniya& Rasas, Ihab. 2012. The relationship between dental anxiety and reported dental treatment experience in children aged 11 to 14 years. Journal of the Royal Medical Services،Vol. 19, no. 2, pp.44-50.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-308870

Modern Language Association (MLA)

al-Far, Man Y.…[et al.]. The relationship between dental anxiety and reported dental treatment experience in children aged 11 to 14 years. Journal of the Royal Medical Services Vol. 19, no. 2 (Jun. 2012), pp.44-50.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-308870

American Medical Association (AMA)

al-Far, Man Y.& Habahbeh, Nidal& al-Saddi, Raniya& Rasas, Ihab. The relationship between dental anxiety and reported dental treatment experience in children aged 11 to 14 years. Journal of the Royal Medical Services. 2012. Vol. 19, no. 2, pp.44-50.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-308870

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references : p. 49-50

Record ID

BIM-308870